<p>Adult patients with diabetes (<i>n</i> = 3745) seen at Johns Hopkins Medicine primary care sites were referred to the Wilmer Eye Institute either based on a primary care provider referral or autonomous AI diagnostic result (referral was made after a positive or non-diagnostic result). An inverse-probability-weighted regression, which incorporated propensity score matching on social determinants of health and relevant clinical variables, showed that implementation of an autonomous AI-assisted diabetic screening program in a primary care clinic was associated with increased presentation to eye care specialist care by African-Americans (<i>p</i> = 0.02). This is significant because African-Americans have traditionally been less likely to undergo annual screening exams and more likely to present with more severe forms of diabetic retinopathy (DR). The results suggest a potential association between office-based, AI-assisted DR screening and improved downstream ophthalmic access for African-American patients. However, given that the analysis was exploratory, this association should be interpreted cautiously and further validated.</p>

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Autonomous AI-assisted diabetic retinopathy screening at primary care is associated with increased presentation to eye care by at risk patients

  • Ariel Leong,
  • Risa M. Wolf,
  • Roomasa Channa,
  • Jiangxia Wang,
  • Harold Lehmann,
  • Michael D. Abramoff,
  • T. Y. Alvin Liu

摘要

Adult patients with diabetes (n = 3745) seen at Johns Hopkins Medicine primary care sites were referred to the Wilmer Eye Institute either based on a primary care provider referral or autonomous AI diagnostic result (referral was made after a positive or non-diagnostic result). An inverse-probability-weighted regression, which incorporated propensity score matching on social determinants of health and relevant clinical variables, showed that implementation of an autonomous AI-assisted diabetic screening program in a primary care clinic was associated with increased presentation to eye care specialist care by African-Americans (p = 0.02). This is significant because African-Americans have traditionally been less likely to undergo annual screening exams and more likely to present with more severe forms of diabetic retinopathy (DR). The results suggest a potential association between office-based, AI-assisted DR screening and improved downstream ophthalmic access for African-American patients. However, given that the analysis was exploratory, this association should be interpreted cautiously and further validated.